Otro punto para el saco del Universidad

El Universidad de Granada mereció más en su visita al Puerto de Santa María, y eso que al menos sacó a su favor un punto bonus defensivo que acerca a los granadinos al Helvetia, a la permanencia.

El partido estuvo marcado por una actuación arbitral polémica. Y es que en la segunda parte, con ventaja para los arlequinados por 7-10, el leonés Santos anuló un ensayo de Valentín a instancias del juez de touche del equipo local, al interpretar que el jugador granadino había tocado el banderín de la zona de marca antes de posar.

Para ese entonces, el ‘Uni’ había remontado un encuentro que se le había puesto cuesta arriba pese a jugar con el viento a favor. El australiano Quitián aprovechaba un cambio de eje en un maul para apuntarse el primer ensayo visitante. Migue García erró la tranformación, al igual que en la segunda que tuvo. Pero antes, otro recital de silbato con las exclusiones temporales de Requena y del propio Pepe Quitián, que dejó a los granadinos veinte minutos con uno menos.

En la segunda parte, en una jugada similar a la del primer ensayo, Quitián situaba el marcador en un esperanzador 7-10. Después llegaría la jugada polémica de Valentín, y a un error imperdonable de Forest, que en la 22 local y con una autopista para marcar, buscó un pase forzado que terminó con golpe para los locales.

Al final, a base de infracciones, y defendiendo la ventaja, el Portuense generó dos situaciones de superioridad con las que volteó el marcador. El ‘Uni’, de sentenciar, acabó con derrota. Al menos ya van dos puntos en la tabla.

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Otro punto para el saco del Universidad

El Universidad de Granada mereció más en su visita al Puerto de Santa María, y eso que al menos sacó a su favor un punto bonus defensivo que acerca a los granadinos al Helvetia, a la permanencia.

El partido estuvo marcado por una actuación arbitral polémica. Y es que en la segunda parte, con ventaja para los arlequinados por 7-10, el leonés Santos anuló un ensayo de Valentín a instancias del juez de touche del equipo local, al interpretar que el jugador granadino había tocado el banderín de la zona de marca antes de posar.

Para ese entonces, el ‘Uni’ había remontado un encuentro que se le había puesto cuesta arriba pese a jugar con el viento a favor. El australiano Quitián aprovechaba un cambio de eje en un maul para apuntarse el primer ensayo visitante. Migue García erró la tranformación, al igual que en la segunda que tuvo. Pero antes, otro recital de silbato con las exclusiones temporales de Requena y del propio Pepe Quitián, que dejó a los granadinos veinte minutos con uno menos.

En la segunda parte, en una jugada similar a la del primer ensayo, Quitián situaba el marcador en un esperanzador 7-10. Después llegaría la jugada polémica de Valentín, y a un error imperdonable de Forest, que en la 22 local y con una autopista para marcar, buscó un pase forzado que terminó con golpe para los locales.

Al final, a base de infracciones, y defendiendo la ventaja, el Portuense generó dos situaciones de superioridad con las que volteó el marcador. El ‘Uni’, de sentenciar, acabó con derrota. Al menos ya van dos puntos en la tabla.

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Dos científicos españoles postulan un sistema revolucionario de memoria RAM

Los españoles Noel Rodríguez y Francisco Gámiz, investigadores del Laboratorio de Nanoelectrónica de la Universidad de Granada, tienen entre manos el que podría convertirse en un nuevo estándar en el almacenamiento digital: la memoria A-RAM. El ingenio, cuyo acrónimo responde a ‘Advanced Random Access Memory’, se postuló en 2009 con la colaboración del laboratorioCEA-LETI en Grenoble, Francia. Se trata, en esencia, del diseño de una celda de memoria que permite una miniaturización mucho mayor que la del actual DRAM, presente en la mayoría de ordenadores, smartphones y consolas, al eliminar el condensador y montar solo un transistor en cada celda.

Como explica Gámiz, las bases de la memoria de acceso rápido se han mantenido inalteradas los últimos 60 años: «Desde su invención en los años 60 por Robert Dennard en IBM (EEUU), las instrucciones y los datos necesarios para el funcionamiento de un ordenador se almacenan en forma de ceros (ausencia de carga) y unos (presencia de carga) en arrays de celdas de memoria DRAM (Dynamic Random Access Memory)». Las celdas de memoria DRAM están formadas por un transistor y un condensador (ó 1T-1C-DRAM), es decir, cada bit de información se almacena en forma de carga eléctrica en una celda formada por un condensador (que almacena la carga) y un transistor a través del cual se accede a dicha carga y, por lo tanto, a la información.

El modelo de A-RAM español elimina el condensador, la parte más difícil de escalar, y almacena toda la información en el transistor, que también sirve el acceso a los datos. De este modo se consigue una memoria mucho más pequeña que proporciona tiempos de retención muy largos, muy bajo consumo de energía y una gran separación entre ambos niveles lógicos, lo que la hace especialmente inmune al ruido/interferencias y a la variabilidad de los procesos tecnológicos.

En el sitio web puede encontrarse una definición mucho más sencilla: «Imaginemos una gran piscina -el estándar de grandes transistores- que es capaz de mantener el agua fría y la caliente separadas durante un periodo de tiempo. ¿Pero qué sucede al intentar realizar el mismo experimento en un vaso de agua, en la última escala del transistor-? Pues que A-RAM puede hacerlo».

El proyecto de Rodríguez y Gámiz se encuentra ya en las últimas fases de desarrollo tras comprobar la prestigiosa publicación IEEE Electron Device Letters que los resultados experimentales se ajustan a las prospecciones teóricas. En estos momentos diez patentes internacionales (UE, Japón, EEUU, Corea…) protegen la A-RAM mientras el equipo se centra en el desarrollo de alternativas derivadas que se ajustan al modelo tridimensional empleado porIntel en su arquitectura Sandy Bridge.

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Dos científicos españoles postulan un sistema revolucionario de memoria RAM

Los españoles Noel Rodríguez y Francisco Gámiz, investigadores del Laboratorio de Nanoelectrónica de la Universidad de Granada, tienen entre manos el que podría convertirse en un nuevo estándar en el almacenamiento digital: la memoria A-RAM. El ingenio, cuyo acrónimo responde a ‘Advanced Random Access Memory’, se postuló en 2009 con la colaboración del laboratorioCEA-LETI en Grenoble, Francia. Se trata, en esencia, del diseño de una celda de memoria que permite una miniaturización mucho mayor que la del actual DRAM, presente en la mayoría de ordenadores, smartphones y consolas, al eliminar el condensador y montar solo un transistor en cada celda.

Como explica Gámiz, las bases de la memoria de acceso rápido se han mantenido inalteradas los últimos 60 años: «Desde su invención en los años 60 por Robert Dennard en IBM (EEUU), las instrucciones y los datos necesarios para el funcionamiento de un ordenador se almacenan en forma de ceros (ausencia de carga) y unos (presencia de carga) en arrays de celdas de memoria DRAM (Dynamic Random Access Memory)». Las celdas de memoria DRAM están formadas por un transistor y un condensador (ó 1T-1C-DRAM), es decir, cada bit de información se almacena en forma de carga eléctrica en una celda formada por un condensador (que almacena la carga) y un transistor a través del cual se accede a dicha carga y, por lo tanto, a la información.

El modelo de A-RAM español elimina el condensador, la parte más difícil de escalar, y almacena toda la información en el transistor, que también sirve el acceso a los datos. De este modo se consigue una memoria mucho más pequeña que proporciona tiempos de retención muy largos, muy bajo consumo de energía y una gran separación entre ambos niveles lógicos, lo que la hace especialmente inmune al ruido/interferencias y a la variabilidad de los procesos tecnológicos.

En el sitio web puede encontrarse una definición mucho más sencilla: «Imaginemos una gran piscina -el estándar de grandes transistores- que es capaz de mantener el agua fría y la caliente separadas durante un periodo de tiempo. ¿Pero qué sucede al intentar realizar el mismo experimento en un vaso de agua, en la última escala del transistor-? Pues que A-RAM puede hacerlo».

El proyecto de Rodríguez y Gámiz se encuentra ya en las últimas fases de desarrollo tras comprobar la prestigiosa publicación IEEE Electron Device Letters que los resultados experimentales se ajustan a las prospecciones teóricas. En estos momentos diez patentes internacionales (UE, Japón, EEUU, Corea…) protegen la A-RAM mientras el equipo se centra en el desarrollo de alternativas derivadas que se ajustan al modelo tridimensional empleado porIntel en su arquitectura Sandy Bridge.

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Simple smile the way to a woman’s heart

All men need to do is flash a grin at a woman and she is more likely to do what he asks, researchers say.

In three experiments researchers looked at how a man’s smile impacted on a woman’s perception of him and her body language.

When the man was in a dominant role – in the experiment given with instructions – women obeyed him more often if he grinned at them.

This was the case even if he said a blatantly sexist statement afterwards.

The study by the University of Granada in Spain also found that women assumed a more narrow and submissive posture when a man smiled at them.

The researchers concluded that the man’s ‘perceived warmth’ was the reason for the woman’s behaviour.

Body language expert Patti Wood said that the findings were troubling but that it could be because women rely on body language more than men for making decisions.

«Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body,» the Daily Mail quoted Wood as saying.

«If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly.

«It’s a tricky situation, and one that highlights just how subtly sexism can intrude on interactions.

«Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body,» she said.

Wood advices women who do not want to be manipulated by a man’s smile is to know what you want before meeting men.

According to her, this will improve your body language and communication and reduce the number of nervous tics that reveal your anxieties.

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Simple smile the way to a woman’s heart

All men need to do is flash a grin at a woman and she is more likely to do what he asks, researchers say.

In three experiments researchers looked at how a man’s smile impacted on a woman’s perception of him and her body language.

When the man was in a dominant role – in the experiment given with instructions – women obeyed him more often if he grinned at them.

This was the case even if he said a blatantly sexist statement afterwards.

The study by the University of Granada in Spain also found that women assumed a more narrow and submissive posture when a man smiled at them.

The researchers concluded that the man’s ‘perceived warmth’ was the reason for the woman’s behaviour.

Body language expert Patti Wood said that the findings were troubling but that it could be because women rely on body language more than men for making decisions.

«Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body,» the Daily Mail quoted Wood as saying.

«If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly.

«It’s a tricky situation, and one that highlights just how subtly sexism can intrude on interactions.

«Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body,» she said.

Wood advices women who do not want to be manipulated by a man’s smile is to know what you want before meeting men.

According to her, this will improve your body language and communication and reduce the number of nervous tics that reveal your anxieties.

Descargar


Flashing a smile gets men their way with women

The University of Granada study in Spain also found that women assumed a more narrow and submissive posture when a man smiled at them. This man’s ‘perceived warmth’ explained the woman’s behaviour, according to the researchers.

Body language expert Patti Wood said the findings were troubling but that it could be because women rely on body language more than men to make decisions.

«Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» said Wood, the Daily Mail reports.
«It’s a tricky situation, and one that highlights just how subtly sexism can intrude on interactions. Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» Wood added.

Wood advises women to know what you want before meeting men if they do not want to be manipulated by a man’s smile − especially when they are at work. She said this will improve your body language and communication and reduce the number of nervous tics that reveal your anxieties.

Wood, who is based in the US, said: «Smiling can make women seem more subordinate. If you’re smiling when giving an important statement, it makes that statement weaker.»

Descargar


Flashing a smile gets men their way with women

The University of Granada study in Spain also found that women assumed a more narrow and submissive posture when a man smiled at them. This man’s ‘perceived warmth’ explained the woman’s behaviour, according to the researchers.

Body language expert Patti Wood said the findings were troubling but that it could be because women rely on body language more than men to make decisions.

«Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» said Wood, the Daily Mail reports.
«It’s a tricky situation, and one that highlights just how subtly sexism can intrude on interactions. Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» Wood added.

Wood advises women to know what you want before meeting men if they do not want to be manipulated by a man’s smile − especially when they are at work. She said this will improve your body language and communication and reduce the number of nervous tics that reveal your anxieties.

Wood, who is based in the US, said: «Smiling can make women seem more subordinate. If you’re smiling when giving an important statement, it makes that statement weaker.»

Descargar


Flashing a smile gets men their way with women

All men need to do is flash a smile at a woman to get her to do his bidding, as suggested by an European study.
The University of Granada study in Spain also found that women assumed a more narrow and submissive posture when a man smiled at them. This man’s ‘perceived warmth’ explained the woman’s behaviour, according to the researchers.
Body language expert Patti Wood said the findings were troubling but that it could be because women rely on body language more than men to make decisions.
«Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» said Wood, the Daily Mail reports.
«It’s a tricky situation, and one that highlights just how subtly sexism can intrude on interactions. Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» Wood added.
Wood advises women to know what you want before meeting men if they do not want to be manipulated by a man’s smile ? especially when they are at work. She said this will improve your body language and communication and reduce the number of nervous tics that reveal your anxieties.
Wood, who is based in the US, said: «Smiling can make women seem more subordinate. If you’re smiling when giving an important statement, it makes that statement weaker.»
Descargar


Flashing a smile gets men their way with women

All men need to do is flash a smile at a woman to get her to do his bidding, as suggested by an European study.
The University of Granada study in Spain also found that women assumed a more narrow and submissive posture when a man smiled at them. This man’s ‘perceived warmth’ explained the woman’s behaviour, according to the researchers.
Body language expert Patti Wood said the findings were troubling but that it could be because women rely on body language more than men to make decisions.
«Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» said Wood, the Daily Mail reports.
«It’s a tricky situation, and one that highlights just how subtly sexism can intrude on interactions. Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» Wood added.
Wood advises women to know what you want before meeting men if they do not want to be manipulated by a man’s smile ? especially when they are at work. She said this will improve your body language and communication and reduce the number of nervous tics that reveal your anxieties.
Wood, who is based in the US, said: «Smiling can make women seem more subordinate. If you’re smiling when giving an important statement, it makes that statement weaker.»
Descargar


Flashing a smile gets men their way with women

All men need to do is flash a smile at a woman to get her to do his bidding, as suggested by an European study. The University of Granada study in Spain also found that women assumed a more narrow and submissive posture when a man smiled at them. This man’s ‘perceived warmth’ explained the woman’s behaviour, according to the researchers.

Body language expert Patti Wood said the findings were troubling but that it could be because women rely on body language more than men to make decisions.

«Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» said Wood, the Daily Mail reports.

«It’s a tricky situation, and one that highlights just how subtly sexism can intrude on interactions. Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» Wood added.

Wood advises women to know what you want before meeting men if they do not want to be manipulated by a man’s smile – especially when they are at work. She said this will improve your body language and communication and reduce the number of nervous tics that reveal your anxieties.

Wood, who is based in the US, said: «Smiling can make women seem more subordinate. If you’re smiling when giving an important statement, it makes that statement weaker.»

Descargar


Flashing a smile gets men their way with women

All men need to do is flash a smile at a woman to get her to do his bidding, as suggested by an European study. The University of Granada study in Spain also found that women assumed a more narrow and submissive posture when a man smiled at them. This man’s ‘perceived warmth’ explained the woman’s behaviour, according to the researchers.

Body language expert Patti Wood said the findings were troubling but that it could be because women rely on body language more than men to make decisions.

«Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» said Wood, the Daily Mail reports.

«It’s a tricky situation, and one that highlights just how subtly sexism can intrude on interactions. Even if there’s dissonance between what’s been said and what his body is doing, women will look to the body. If they see a smile, then the interaction seems more friendly,» Wood added.

Wood advises women to know what you want before meeting men if they do not want to be manipulated by a man’s smile – especially when they are at work. She said this will improve your body language and communication and reduce the number of nervous tics that reveal your anxieties.

Wood, who is based in the US, said: «Smiling can make women seem more subordinate. If you’re smiling when giving an important statement, it makes that statement weaker.»

Descargar